927 resultados para Sujet-nation
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This article deals with Swiss nationalism and Swiss nation-building. Its main thesis is that Switzerland cannot accurately be described as either a nation or a non-nation but is something in between, and could thus best be characterised as a 'fractured' nation. Switzerland has experienced some powerful nationalist moments, from the creation of the Swiss state in 1848 to the last few decades. Yet this recurrent nationalism among the Swiss, considered alongside their more traditional reluctance to consider themselves a nation, make Switzerland a peculiar object: a 'fractured' nation. This flawed process of nation-building in turn reveals some basic characteristics of all nations - inherent artificiality, and the tremendous efforts undertaken to hide it. Switzerland could be considered an unfinished, incomplete nation, and this is precisely why its study can be interesting for scholars of nations and nationalism.
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The purpose of this study was to examine the psychometric properties of the Utrecht-Management of Identity Commitments Scale (U-MICS), a self-report measure aimed at assessing identity processes of commitment, in-depth exploration, and reconsideration of commitment. We tested its factor structure in university students from a large array of cultural contexts, including 10 nations located in Europe (i.e., Italy, the Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Romania, and Switzerland), Middle East (i.e., Turkey), and Asia (i.e., China, Japan, and Taiwan). Furthermore, we tested national and gender measurement invariance. Participants were 6,118 (63.2% females) university students aged from 18 to 25 years (Mage = 20.91 years). Results indicated that the three-factor structure of the U-MICS fitted well in the total sample, in each national group, and in gender groups. Furthermore, national and gender measurement invariance were established. Thus, the U-MICS can be fruitfully applied to study identity in university students from various Western and non-Western contexts.
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This paper analyzes Spanish infrastructure policy since the early 1700s: Road building in the eighteenth century, railway creation and expansion in the nineteenth, motorway expansion in the twentieth, and high speed rail development in the twenty-first. The analysis reveals a long-term pattern, in which infrastructure policy in Spain has been driven not by the requirements of commerce and economic activity, but rather by the desire to centralize transportation around the country’s political capital.
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Depuis les études princeps de phase III de non-inf ériorité comparant les anticoagulants oraux directs (AOD) à la warfarine, de nombreuses études ont essayé de répondre à la question de l'efficacité et de la sécurité d'utilisation des AOD chez les patients âgés. Ces études sont des études de sous-groupes complémentaires issues des études princeps ou des études de pharmacovigilance en postmarketing utilisant des données médicoéconomiques à grande échelle. De nombreux biais, par définition, peuvent entraîner une distorsion des résultats dans de telles études, rendant leur interprétation prudente. Aucun essai randomisé contrôlé n'a à ce jour comparé les AOD à la warfarine chez des patients de 80 ans ou plus et a fortiori chez des sujets âgés fragiles. En pratique, chez le patient âgé fragile, il n'y a pas de consensus quant au choix des anticoagulants à prescrire en cas de fibrillation atriale (FA) et de la maladie thromboembolique veineuse (MTEV). Quant au choix de l'AOD à privilégier chez le sujet âgé, faute d'études de comparaison directe disponibles à ce jour, il apparaît difficile de se prononcer. Toutefois, les données disponibles, tant sur le plan pharmacologique que celles issues des études complémentaires, semblent montrer que le dabigatran offre un profil bénéfice/risque moins favorable que les autres AOD. Néanmoins, les résultats prometteurs de l'idarucizumab, antidote du dabigatran, pourraient contribuer à améliorer ce rapport à l'avenir.
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Kirjallisuusarvostelu
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Collection : Archives de la linguistique française ; 302
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Globalization and nation-states are not in contradiction, since globalization is the present stage of capitalist development, and the nation-state is the territorial political unit that organizes the space and population in the capitalist system. Since the 1980s, Global Capitalism constitutes the economic system characterized by the opening of all national markets and a fierce competition between nation-states. Developing countries tend to catch up, while rich countries try to neutralize such competitive effort, using globalism as an ideology, and conventional orthodoxy as a strategy. Middle-income countries that are catching up in the realm of globalization are the ones that count with a national development strategy. This is broadly the case of the dynamic Asian countries. In contrast, Latin American countries have no longer their own strategy, and grow less. To add data to the argument, the author conducts an econometric test comparing these two groups of countries, and three variables: the rate of investment, the current account deficit or surplus that would indicate or not a competitive exchange rate, and public deficit.
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ABSTRACTThe term "energy nationalism" is frequently used by academic literature and media, but usually without adequate conceptual accuracy. Despite this, a set of papers deepens the discussion on the relationship between nation states and the energy industry, especially the oil sector. These papers allow identifying fundamental elements to understand the energy nationalism, either complementary or divergent between each other. Thus, this study aims at presenting an interpretation of the concept that fills the gaps left by the above mentioned literature based on a global analysis of the oil industry structure and its historical evolution since the mid-19thcentury.